---
title: "Deprecating the bash rprompt"
description: "Deprecating the bash rprompt"
slug: deprecating-bash-rprompt
authors:
- name: Jan De Dobbeleer
  title: Maintainer
  url: https://github.com/jandedobbeleer
  image_url: https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/2492783?v=4
tags: [breaking, ohmyposh]
hide_table_of_contents: false
---

After careful consideration, it was decided to remove support for the [`rprompt`][rprompt] in bash. If you are
interested in the reasons behind this decision, please read on.

<!--truncate-->
## Context

[`rprompt`][rprompt] is a feature that allows you to display a prompt at the right side of the terminal, on
the same line as your cursor. This feature is available natively on a lot of shells, but not on bash.
To work around this limitation, Oh My Posh has a **custom implementation** we use for both bash and PowerShell.

## History

### First implementation

There were two evolutions of bash' custom [`rprompt`][rprompt] in Oh My Posh. The first one printed the [`rprompt`][rprompt]
together with the primany prompt in the `PS1` variable, so we only need one CLI call to visualize the prompt.

The challenge is that, as the [`rprompt`][rprompt] is printed together with the primary prompt, we need to make sure
bash' readline can interpret the prompt correctly. In bash, every character that isn't a printable character,
like color codes, needs to be wrapped in `\[` and `\]`. This is necessary to make sure bash can **calculate the length**
of the prompt and ultimately **position the cursor** correctly.

It turned out that for [`rprompt`][rprompt], this _needed to be done differently_. The [`rprompt`][rprompt] is printed after what
bash interprets as the end of the prompt. We found out that we need to wrap the entire [`rprompt`][rprompt] in `\[` and `\]`,
and not escape individual non-printable characters.

We did that for a while, but apparently this approach was **not very robust**. It was easy to break readline's
cursor position calculation, and it was hard to debug. The behaviour of this was also different cross platform,
so we had to go back to the drawing board.

### Second implementation

The second implementation of the [`rprompt`][rprompt] was a lot more robust. We decided to print the [`rprompt`][rprompt] in a separate
CLI call, so we could control the output more easily. It leveraged the use of the `PROMPT_COMMAND` variable in bash, which
is a hook that is executed before the prompt is printed. We would first print the [`rprompt`][rprompt] in the `PROMPT_COMMAND`,
and then set the primary prompt in the `PS1` variable so bash would not bother about the [`rprompt`][rprompt] being there.

This approach was a lot **cleaner from an achitectural point of view**, but it came with its own challenges.
The most obvious one is needing two CLI calls to print the prompt, which made rendering a bit slower than the first implementation.

Additionally, as we print before `PS1` is evaluated, we noticed the following issues along the way:

1. when the output of the previous command didn't end with a newline, the [`rprompt`][rprompt] would be printed on the same line
  as the output of the previous command
2. when the prompt was at the bottom of the terminal buffer, the [`rprompt`][rprompt] would be printed on the same line as the
  prompt, which would break the prompt
3. depending on the platform, it would still break command history navigation
4. it required different logic for multiline prompts as we print before `PS1` and need to reposition the cursor correctly

Of these issues, **only bullet 4 could be fixed**. Everything else was outside of our control.

## Conclusion

Oh My Posh is a tool that needs to be easy to use, maintain and be 100% reliable. One of the core principles of Oh My Posh is that it should
**never break the shell**. The [`rprompt`][rprompt] feature in bash has never been reliable enough, and it was _hard to debug_ when it broke.
I spent countless hours debugging issues with the [`rprompt`][rprompt] in bash, but it's **time to move on**. If you
want to use the [`rprompt`][rprompt] feature, I would recommend using a shell that supports it natively, like [nushell], [zsh] or [fish].

## What about Powershell?

The [`rprompt`][rprompt] feature in PowerShell is **100% reliable**, even if it's not natively supported. PowerShell doesn't
have the same challenges calculating the actual prompt width like bash, there's _no need to escape anything_.
We can use the first implementation mentioned above, and it works like a charm.

[rprompt]: /docs/configuration/block#type
[nushell]: https://www.nushell.sh/
[zsh]: https://www.zsh.org/
[fish]: https://fishshell.com/
